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Stephen Bowie's best-in-class blog (http://classictvhistory.wordpress.com/) recently discussed a Netflix phenomenon I've been noticing. And since he explains it better than I could, here's his take:
Over the last several years, a lot of us stopped buying DVDs, thinking we could always rent them from Netflix instead. That's all changing now.
It's bad enough that Netflix is passing over DVD releases of classic (or at least interesting) movies. It's becoming clear that the company doesn't care much about vintage TV, either:
Sure, there's always digital downloads, assuming you've got the bandwidth, but you can't get the extras, the commentary tracks, the liner notes and other things we've taken for granted from DVD releases.
The DVD market has already been knocked to its knees, with sales down 40% industrywide since 2007. That slowdown explains why some video releases have slowed to a crawl (only four seasons of Alfred Hitchcock Presents have been released over the last decade, with six to go), or been snuffed out altogether (only the first season and a half of The Big Valley were issued on DVD, before CBS quietly walked away).
Barring an unexpected and unlikely revival of the DVD business, entertainment from years gone by will soon be available only on a very short-term rental basis, if it's available at all... and that availability can be cut off at any time because of technical or licensing issues, not to mention profitability issues for the content providers.
Virtually all of the movies and programming from the early- and mid-20th Century exist in a narrow market niche. There are only so many of us with any interest in that stuff. Even so, the costs of releasing it on DVD can be recovered when 500 or 1000 of us buy it, because the producing company gets $10-$30 from each of us who do. But when the producer can only get a buck, or a buck-and-a-quarter, from a download... it'll take a whole lot more customers to reach the break-even point. Are there really that many of us? I don't think so.
The golden age of accessibility is fading away before our eyes.
Within the last year or two, Netflix has quietly stopped purchasing the majority of new catalog titles that debut on home video.
As of this writing, Netflix still buys most Criterion DVDs, but not necessarily their Blu-rays or the vital box sets on their sub-label Eclipse. Almost every other independent label is shut out, and even the major studios’ catalog releases are often passed over.
Over the last several years, a lot of us stopped buying DVDs, thinking we could always rent them from Netflix instead. That's all changing now.
How can Netflix abandon DVDs when it is, or was, a disc rental business? Because of streaming video. In December, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings said that his management team was devoting 98% of its attention to streaming and only 2% on rental by mail. “Pretty soon, we’re going to be a streaming business that rents some DVDs,” said Hastings.
It's bad enough that Netflix is passing over DVD releases of classic (or at least interesting) movies. It's becoming clear that the company doesn't care much about vintage TV, either:
The most recent DVD releases of The Fugitive, Leave It to Beaver, The Patty Duke Show, The Donna Reed Show, Route 66, and The Lucy Show are all unavailable. The Twilight Zone and recent seasons of C.S.I. are not rentable on Blu-ray, a format for which Netflix has lately developed a particular aversion. Nearly the whole catalog of Timeless Media, presently the most important independent label specializing in television, is unknown to Netflix. That means no Wagon Train, no The Virginian, no Johnny Staccato, no Arrest and Trial, no Soldiers of Fortune, no Coronado 9, and only a stingy helping of Checkmate.
Worst of all, earlier seasons of many popular series – Hawaii Five-O, The Outer Limits, Father Knows Best – have disappeared recently, even though Netflix used to offer them. All of these shows are still in print, so the likelihood is that Netflix has chosen not to replace discs that get lost or damaged. And even though it’s not necessary, it appears that Netflix deletes an entire TV season as soon as just one disc from that set is depleted from its inventory. I suspect that what I’ve noticed is just the tip of the iceberg, and that unless Netflix reverses its policy of not replacing lost discs, we will soon see an epidemic of unavailable classics.
Sure, there's always digital downloads, assuming you've got the bandwidth, but you can't get the extras, the commentary tracks, the liner notes and other things we've taken for granted from DVD releases.
The DVD market has already been knocked to its knees, with sales down 40% industrywide since 2007. That slowdown explains why some video releases have slowed to a crawl (only four seasons of Alfred Hitchcock Presents have been released over the last decade, with six to go), or been snuffed out altogether (only the first season and a half of The Big Valley were issued on DVD, before CBS quietly walked away).
Barring an unexpected and unlikely revival of the DVD business, entertainment from years gone by will soon be available only on a very short-term rental basis, if it's available at all... and that availability can be cut off at any time because of technical or licensing issues, not to mention profitability issues for the content providers.
Virtually all of the movies and programming from the early- and mid-20th Century exist in a narrow market niche. There are only so many of us with any interest in that stuff. Even so, the costs of releasing it on DVD can be recovered when 500 or 1000 of us buy it, because the producing company gets $10-$30 from each of us who do. But when the producer can only get a buck, or a buck-and-a-quarter, from a download... it'll take a whole lot more customers to reach the break-even point. Are there really that many of us? I don't think so.
The golden age of accessibility is fading away before our eyes.
